Verb
rally round (third-person singular simple present rallies round, present participle rallying round, simple past and past participle rallied round)
(idiomatic, said of a group of people) To unite in order to support a fellow group member.
“He recently took a very serious turn for the worse and was very poorly but, thankfully, he managed to rally round once again,” she said. Source: Internet
So the vast majority of our people will surely rally round a programmed which restores the economy through the participation of all. Source: Internet
The rest of the fauna perhaps will rally round in paying their last respects, as the species that were too good for their own good perhaps deserves one last rite courtesy the community that is going to live on! Source: Internet
The wider ramifications saw NGOs and one law firm rally round the couple. Source: Internet
This cry from the heart or lament over the lost opportunity for greatness that we had – and still have – is not a call to rally round the flag of any of the previous regime’s standard-bearers. Source: Internet
In times of great crisis, healthcare professionals, corporations and governments should rally round. Source: Internet